Michael Bredl

Michael Bredl (24 December 1915 – 22 June 1999) was a German Volksmusik musician and collector, publisher, teacher and the first Volksmusik conservator in Bavarian Swabia in the region of Allgäu.[1]

Michael Bredl
Born(1915-12-24)24 December 1915
Died22 June 1999(1999-06-22) (aged 83)
Occupationteacher, musician
Known forInterpret and collector of traditional German Volksmusik

Life

Michael Bredl Michl grew up in the Bavarian Forest, in Lower Bavaria. The family with 13 children sang and played music a lot. In 1931 there was the first Lower Bavarian youth singing in Landshut and Bredl won the first prize together with two brothers. Since this time Kiem Pauli has been promoting the Bredl brothers and a lifelong friendship has developed.[2] Michael Bredl was a singer and played virtuoso zither, in addition to violin, wind instruments and piano. He often appeared onstage together with Pauli.

After 1945 Pauli brought Bredl as a teacher to Eggenthal near Kaufbeuren. There he founded the first rural singing and folk music school in Bavarian Swabia. In 1957, at the request of Alfred Weitnauer, who was at that time Swabian Heimatpfleger (conservator of regional traditions), Bredl was employed as a teacher in Bad Hindelang. Here too, he immediately founded a group of singers and musicians.

The Alphorn had not been known in the Allgäu for a long time until Bredl had discovered the alphorn on old motifs from the Allgäu in 1958. This proved that the Alphorn had existed in the Allgäu region a long time ago. In 1960 the brothers Albert and Herbert Wechs from Hindelang started to build alphorns again in the Allgäu. Bredl was the first folk musician in the Allgäu to play the alphorn again. Today an Alphorn tradition in the Allgäu has developed from that.[3] Bredl has also contributed to the fact that the rare Allgäuer scherrzither, an ancient local form of the zither, has become better known again. In 1971 he conducted the first seminars for Scherrzither.

From 1965 to 1967 Bredl was the first full-time folk music custodian in Bavarian Swabia.[4] He was released from teaching. He systematically collected and published Swabian folk music. Thus the Volksmusik archive of Swabia was created in Krumbach. This later became the Folk Music Counselling Office, which led Bredl until 1998.

Publishing

Music sheets

  • Volksmusik aus Schwaben. Aufgezeichnet und gesammelt vom schwäbischen Volksmusikpfleger Michael Bredl. - Musikverlag Josef Preissler, München 1966
  • D'r Hiertebue: Volksmusik aus dem schwäbisch-alemannischen Raum. 1967
  • Schwäbische Tänze für Blasmusik, zusammengest. von Michael Bredl, München 1967, 10 Stimmhefte
  • Schwäbische Tänze für Akkordeon, Zugleich Direktionsstimme zu Heft 2:Schwäbische Tänze für Blasmusik“, zusammengest. von Michael Bredl, München (1967), 30 S., nur Note
  • Das Tiroler Raffele und die Allgäuer Scherrzither. Zusammen mit Karl Horak und Volker Laturell. München, 1990

Discography

  • Sechs Schallplatten mit Volksmusik aus verschiedenen bayerischen Regionen, u.a. Schwäbische Volkslieder, herausgegeben von Michael Bredl

Awards

  • 1977: Bundesverdienstkreuz am Bande
  • 1979: Ehrentaler für hervorragende Verdienste um die Allgäuer Heimat verliehen vom Heimatbund Allgäu[5]
  • 1998 Ehrengabe Schwäbische Nachtigall[6]

References

  1. "Michael Bredl in Bayerisches Musiker-Lexikon". Archived from the original on 2017-12-06. Retrieved 2017-12-04.
  2. "Musik im Allgäu und in Oberschwaben: Michael Bredl". Archived from the original on 2017-11-07. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  3. Thomas Niehörster: Wie das Alphorn ins Allgäu kam: die Geschichte des Alphorns. Bad Hindelang, 2012
  4. Manfred Seifert, Volksmusikpflege Archived 2016-08-16 at the Wayback Machine published 13 November 2006; in: Historisches Lexikon Bayerns (13 October 2017)
  5. "Heimatbund Allgäu: Ehrenpreise". Archived from the original on 2017-12-05. Retrieved 2017-12-04.
  6. Georg Simnacher: Laudationes des Bezirkstagspräsidenten zur Verleihung der Ehrengabe „Schwäbische Nachtigall“ (21 June 1998 in Irsee)
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